Yes, install your 25-year-old software on your 30-year-old NTFS filesystem (it’s that old).
EDIT: I just looked it up and NTFS turns 30 on July 27th, 2023 LOL
Father, Hacker (Information Security Professional), Open Source Software Developer, Inventor, and 3D printing enthusiast.
Yes, install your 25-year-old software on your 30-year-old NTFS filesystem (it’s that old).
EDIT: I just looked it up and NTFS turns 30 on July 27th, 2023 LOL
OMG great question! I want:
An unlocked bootloader and a normal Linux distribution where I have root!
What a cattastrophe!
Ahaha, someone who knows
Adding over-engineered hardware into the mix isn’t out of the question 😁
I’ve never used anything Oracle out of principle
As someone who’s been forced to use Oracle products many times in the past I nod to your standards and tip my hat for your sound judgement 👍
Can you do us all a favor and blog about your experience setting this up and running it somewhere? I’ll follow you 👍
I was thinking about making my own Federated kbin-like server (writing the code from scratch) as an academic exercise. I’m a full stack developer and it’s the perfect thing to hone my non-embedded (full std
) Rust skills and freshen my JavaScript skills.
I have several side projects going on at the moment (that I’ve been working on constantly for almost three years straight) and I need a mental break from that. I’d love to learn what’s a pain in the ass VS what’s good from a semi-layman’s perspective so I can make something better.
I may be just a pie-in-the-sky optimist but I think the duplicate communities thing will die down eventually. Natural selection will do it’s thing and we’ll all eventually settle in specific communities on specific instances.
Based on the nature of life itself all living things become specialized over time. This includes creatures, jobs, products, communities, etc. So what’s likely to happen is some communities will die out or be abandoned while others will thrive and yet others will simply become more specialized.
Hypothetical example: /m/gifs on Kbin might become the place to find perfect loops and high quality/serious stuff while /m/gifs on some other instance might become the place for animated silliness.
Biking infrastructure is only useful in big cities where your distance to work could be quite short (within 5 miles or so). The average American commute distance is 41 miles. It just doesn’t make sense to build out bike infrastructure very many places in the US.
Trains and changing the roads to make it easier for cars to drive themselves make a lot more sense.